Samsung teases AI OLED Cassette and Turntable — display division stretches the feasible use cases for its latest tech at CES 2026

Samsung teases AI OLED Cassette, Turntable, and more at CES 2026
(Image credit: Samsung Display)

Samsung is teasing some intriguing new OLED products, ready to showcase at CES 2026 over the next few days. Samsung Display’s press release highlights the flexible solutions that its latest OLED technologies can enable, by outlining “several speaker-type AI assistant concepts.” In addition to the (predictable) cute robot and mood lamps, it shared images of the eyebrow-raising AI OLED Cassette and AI OLED Turntable.

A next-gen lineup of OLED products is promised by Samsung Display for CES 2026, under the banner of ‘A New Era of Experience, Powered by AI & Display.’ The exhibition seems a reasonable proposition, but it is sometimes surprising what products have made it through brainstorming and multiple revisions (we would expect) to make it to the show floor.

What caught our attention in this latest news were the “Edge Device concept models that illustrate how OLED could elevate AI-driven lifestyles when applied to AI-enabled form factors.”

Samsung gently introduces the ideas of an AI OLED Bot and an AI OLED Mood Lamp as demo platforms for its circular OLED displays and AI assistant tech. These seem like well-trodden product ideas, even if the displays are quite special, some of the company’s most advanced.

Samsung teases AI OLED Cassette, Turntable, and more at CES 2026

(Image credit: Samsung Display)

Sadly, deep details of the headlining pair of devices are not available today. The AI OLED Cassette is built around a pair of 1.5-inch round OLED displays (or more). We can see one features a smartwatch style interactive display, and the other a status page. There also seems to be a lozenge shaped display above these circular OLEDs with an interactive tuning dial, or something like that.

Samsung Display’s AI OLED Turntable is even more intriguing, based around a circular 13.4-inch OLED. The second of its retro-analog devices appears to be touch controlled. What the practical, or fun, use of such a large circular touch display is, in an AI OLED turntable device, isn’t obvious at this time.

Other Samsung Display CES 2026 highlights

We’ve had fun looking at Samsung Display’s productized flights of fancy – even if it prefixes then all with ‘AI.’ However, there’s some really worthwhile advances highlighted in its PR.

For example, the firm is also producing tougher than ever OLEDs, with durability demonstrated by its robot basketball test, steel ball drop test, and refrigerator (cold temperature) tests.

In automotive, Samsung will also demonstrate multiple in-car displays such as an 18.1‑inch Flexible L‑shaped Center Display, a 30‑inch 32:9 Rear Seat Entertainment display, and - OLED tail lamp displays capable of showing warnings like ‘Accident Ahead.’

Road warriors may also appreciate the new UT One (Ultra Thin) OLED, which promises “30% thinner and 30% lighter” panels for laptops, using hybrid thin‑film layers and Oxide TFT for 1–120Hz variable refresh. Color fidelity isn’t neglected, with these 100% DCI-P3 color panels claimed to deliver “deeper blacks by eliminating the air gap between glass substrates.” Other new OLED monitors and TVs are set to offer new always-on modes and 4,500‑nits peak brightness levels.

Samsung teases AI OLED Cassette, Turntable, and more at CES 2026

(Image credit: Samsung Display)

Last but not least, we’d like to highlight Samsung’s new 1.4‑inch RGB OLEDoS. This XR microdisplay targets headsets with its compact 5,000 PPI display and wide viewing angles.

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Mark Tyson
News Editor
  • Dementoss
    I don't need AI with everything, I don't need an OLED display with everything. It's not "intriguing", it's just a manufacturer trying to con us into believing we need things, no-one ever wanted, or needed.

    More electronic waste heading for landfill...
    Reply
  • -Fran-
    I like my electronics kind of dumb, so I can actually use them as I want and not as the vendor wants.

    I hope someone realises that and competes with more dumb devices. Specially TVs and monitors. I just want a very good panel on them, at an affordable price, with DP2.1 and HDMI2.1. Just that. None of this "smart" stuff they want us to think is "good". Sell the "add on PC stick" separately and save the ones who already have an HTPC or livingroom device (like a console) some money.

    And for the strawman-argument havers: no, dumb devices does not mean we want to go back to being neanderthals and use a bone-hammer for things.

    Regards.
    Reply
  • BFG-9000
    TVs without smart features are sold as commercial TVs for use by businesses. They cost more, not less, because each publisher pays the TV manufacturer a fee to include their app on the TV (much like bloatware included in brandname PCs) which helps to subsidize the price.

    I don't see how AI features could help defray the cost of music players with expensive OLED screens though, unless those screens play ads or the AI strongly suggests new "music" that publishers pay Samsung a fee to promote.

    Subaru is now popping up fullscreen ads for SiriusXM on car infotainment systems, and Stellantis pushes offers to buy a new Stellantis vehicle. Consumers are urged to report this safety hazard to NHTSA
    https://pbs.twimg.com/media/G5-Rk3WWMAAOKm5?format=jpg&name=900x900https://images-stag.jazelc.com/uploads/theautopian-m2en/siriusxm-pop-up-ad--1024x850.png
    Reply